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- Creator:
- Seabloom, Eric W., Borer, Elizabeth T., Buckley, Yvonne, Cleland, Elsa E., Davies, Kendi, Firn, Jennifer, Harpole, W. Stanley, Hautier, Yann, Lind, Eric, Macdougall, Andrew, Orrock, John L., Prober, Suzanne M., Adler, Peter, Alberti, Juan, Anderson, T. Michael, Bakker, Jonathan D., Biederman, Lori A., Blumenthal, Dana, Brown, Cynthia S., Brudvig, Lars A., Caldeira, Maria, Chu, Chengjin, Crawley, Michael J., Daleo, Pedro, Damschen, Ellen I., D'Antonio, Carla M., Decrappeo, Nicole M., Dickman, Chris R., Du, Guozhen, Fay, Philip A., Frater, Paul, Gruner, Daniel S., Hagenah, Nicole, Hector, Andrew, Helm, Aveliina, Hillebrand, Helmut, Hofmockel, Kirsten S., Humphries, Hope C., Iribarne, Oscar, Jin, Virginia L., Kay, Adam, Kirkman, Kevin P., Klein, Julia A., Knops, Johannes M. H., La Pierre, Kimberly J., Ladwig, Laura M., Lambrinos, John G., Leakey, Andrew D. B., Li, Qi, Li, Wei, Mcculley, Rebecca, Melbourne, Brett, Mitchell, Charles E., Moore, Joslin L., Morgan, John, Mortensen, Brent, O'Halloran, Lydia R., Paertel, Meelis, Pascual, Jesus, Pyke, David A., Risch, Anita C., Salguero-Gomez, Roberto, Sankaran, Mahesh, Schuetz, Martin, Simonsen, Anna, Smith, Melinda, Stevens, Carly, Sullivan, Lauren, Wardle, Glenda M., Wolkovich, Elizabeth M., Wragg, Peter D., Wright, Justin, and Yang, Louie
- Abstract:
- Invasions have increased the size of regional species pools, but are typically assumed to reduce native diversity. However, global-scale tests of this assumption have been elusive because of the focus on exotic species richness, rather than relative abundance. This is problematic because low invader richness can indicate invasion resistance by...
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- temperature (C); aboveground live biomass (log g m-2 yr-1); aboveground dead biomass (log g m-2). 8 Estimated
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- Creator:
- Seabloom, Eric W., Borer, Elizabeth T., Buckley, Yvonne, Cleland, Elsa E., Davies, Kendi, Firn, Jennifer, Harpole, W. Stanley, Hautier, Yann, Lind, Eric, Macdougall, Andrew, Orrock, John L., Prober, Suzanne M., Adler, Peter, Alberti, Juan, Anderson, T. Michael, Bakker, Jonathan D., Biederman, Lori A., Blumenthal, Dana, Brown, Cynthia S., Brudvig, Lars A., Caldeira, Maria, Chu, Chengjin, Crawley, Michael J., Daleo, Pedro, Damschen, Ellen I., D'Antonio, Carla M., Decrappeo, Nicole M., Dickman, Chris R., Du, Guozhen, Fay, Philip A., Frater, Paul, Gruner, Daniel S., Hagenah, Nicole, Hector, Andrew, Helm, Aveliina, Hillebrand, Helmut, Hofmockel, Kirsten S., Humphries, Hope C., Iribarne, Oscar, Jin, Virginia L., Kay, Adam, Kirkman, Kevin P., Klein, Julia A., Knops, Johannes M. H., La Pierre, Kimberly J., Ladwig, Laura M., Lambrinos, John G., Leakey, Andrew D. B., Li, Qi, Li, Wei, Mcculley, Rebecca, Melbourne, Brett, Mitchell, Charles E., Moore, Joslin L., Morgan, John, Mortensen, Brent, O'Halloran, Lydia R., Paertel, Meelis, Pascual, Jesus, Pyke, David A., Risch, Anita C., Salguero-Gomez, Roberto, Sankaran, Mahesh, Schuetz, Martin, Simonsen, Anna, Smith, Melinda, Stevens, Carly, Sullivan, Lauren, Wardle, Glenda M., Wolkovich, Elizabeth M., Wragg, Peter D., Wright, Justin, and Yang, Louie
- Abstract:
- Invasions have increased the size of regional species pools, but are typically assumed to reduce native diversity. However, global-scale tests of this assumption have been elusive because of the focus on exotic species richness, rather than relative abundance. This is problematic because low invader richness can indicate invasion resistance by...
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- productivity (26–1408 g m�2 yr�1). The lead scientist at each site provided latitude and eleva- tion data
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- Creator:
- Seabloom, Eric W., Borer, Elizabeth T., Buckley, Yvonne M., Cleland, Elsa E., Davies, Kendi F., Firn, Jennifer, Harpole, W. Stanley, Hautier, Yann, Lind, Eric M., MacDougall, Andrew S., Orrock, John L., Prober, Suzanne M., Adler, Peter B., Anderson, T. Michael, Bakker, Jonathan D., Biederman, Lori A., Blumenthal, Dana M., Brown, Cynthia S., Brudvig, Lars A., Cadotte, Marc, Chu, Chengjin, Cottingham, Kathryn L., Crawley, Michael J., Damschen, Ellen I., Dantonio, Carla M., DeCrappeo, Nicole M., Du, Guozhen, Fay, Philip A., Frater, Paul, Gruner, Daniel S., Hagenah, Nicole, Hector, Andy, Hillebrand, Helmut, Hofmockel, Kirsten S., Humphries, Hope C., Jin, Virginia L., Kay, Adam, Kirkman, Kevin P., Klein, Julia A., Knops, Johannes M. H., La Pierre, Kimberly J., Ladwig, Laura, Lambrinos, John G., Li, Qi, Li, Wei, Marushia, Robin, McCulley, Rebecca L., Melbourne, Brett A., Mitchell, Charles E., Moore, Joslin L., Morgan, John, Mortensen, Brent, O'Halloran, Lydia R., Pyke, David A., Risch, Anita C., Sankaran, Mahesh, Schuetz, Martin, Simonsen, Anna, Smith, Melinda D., Stevens, Carly J., Sullivan, Lauren, Wolkovich, Elizabeth, Wragg, Peter D., Wright, Justin, and Yang, Louie
- Abstract:
- Exotic species dominate many communities; however the functional significance of species’ biogeographic origin remains highly contentious. This debate is fuelled in part by the lack of globally replicated, systematic data assessing the relationship between species provenance, function and response to perturbations. We examined the abundance of native and exotic plant...
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- Article
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- Creator:
- Bakker, D. C. E., Pfeil, B., Smith, K., Hankin, S., Olsen, A., Alin, S. R., Cosca, C., Harasawa, S., Kozyr, A., Nojiri, Y., O'Brien, K. M., Schuster, U., Telszewski, M., Tilbrook, B., Wada, C., Akl, J., Barbero, L., Bates, N. R., Boutin, J., Bozec, Y., Cai, W.-J., Castle, R. D., Chavez, F. P., Chen, L., Chierici, M., Currie, K., de Baar, H. J. W., Evans, W., Feely, R. A., Fransson, A., Gao, Z., Hales, B., Hardman-Mountford, N. J., Hoppema, M., Huang, W.-J., Hunt, C. W., Huss, B., Ichikawa, T., Johannessen, T., Jones, E. M., Jones, S. D., Jutterström, S., Kitidis, V., Körtzinger, A., Landschützer, P., Lauvset, S. K., Lefèvre, N., Manke, A. B., Mathis, J. T., Merlivat, L., Metzl, N., Murata, A., Newberger, T., Omar, A. M., Ono, T., Park, G.-H., Paterson, K., Pierrot, D., Ríos, A. F., Sabine, C. L., Saito, S., Salisbury, J., Sarma, V. V. S. S., Schlitzer, R., Sieger, R., Skjelvan, I., Steinhoff, T., Sullivan, K. F., Sun, H., Sutton, A. J., Suzuki, T., Sweeney, C., Takahashi, T., Tjiputra, J., Tsurushima, N., van Heuven, S. M. A. C., Vandemark, D., Vlahos, P., Wallace, D. W. R., Wanninkhof, R., and Watson, A. J.
- Abstract:
- The Surface Ocean CO2 Atlas (SOCAT), an activity of the international marine carbon research community, provides access to synthesis and gridded fCO2 (fugacity of carbon dioxide) products for the surface oceans. Version 2 of SOCAT is an update of the previous release (version 1) with more data (increased from 6.3...
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- . Murata40, T. Newberger41, A. M. Omar6,3,2, T. Ono33, G.-H. Park42, K. Paterson11, D. Pierrot13, A. F
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- Creator:
- Réjou-Méchain, M., Muller-Landau, H. C., Detto, M., Thomas, S. C., Toan, T. Le, Saatchi, S. S., Barreto-Silva, J. S., Bourg, N. A., Bunyavejchewin, S., Butt, N., Brockelman, W. Y., Cao, M., Cárdenas, D., Chiang, J.-M., Chuyong, G. B., Clay, K., Condit, R., Dattaraja, H. S., Davies, S. J., Duque, A., Esufali, S., Ewango, C., Fernando, R. H. S., Fletcher, C. D., Gunatilleke, I. A. U. N., Hao, Z., Harms, K. E., Hart, T. B., Hérault, B., Howe, R. W., Hubbell, S. P., Johnson, D. J., Kenfack, D., Larson, A. J., Lin, L., Lin, Y., Lutz, J. A., Makana, J.-R., Malhi, Y., Marthews, T. R., McEwan, R. W., McMahon, S. M., McShea, W. J., Muscarella, R., Nathalang, A., Noor, N. S. M., Nytch, C. J., Oliveira, A. A., Phillips, R. P., Pongpattananurak, N., Punchi-Manage, R., Salim, R., Schurman, J., Sukumar, R., Suresh, H. S., Suwanvecho, U., Thomas, D. W., Thompson, J., Uríarte, M., Valencia, R., Vicentini, A., Wolf, A. T., Yap, S., Yuan, Z., Zartman, C. E., Zimmerman, J. K., and Chave, J.
- Abstract:
- Advances in forest carbon mapping have the potential to greatly reduce uncertainties in the global carbon budget and to facilitate effective emissions mitigation strategies such as REDDC (Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation). Though broad-scale mapping is based primarily on remote sensing data, the accuracy of resulting forest carbon...
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- Article
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Predicting invasion in grassland ecosystems: is exotic dominance the real embarrassment of richness?
- Creator:
- Seabloom, Eric W., Borer, Elizabeth T., Buckley, Yvonne, Cleland, Elsa E., Davies, Kendi, Firn, Jennifer, Harpole, W. Stanley, Hautier, Yann, Lind, Eric, Macdougall, Andrew, Orrock, John L., Prober, Suzanne M., Adler, Peter, Alberti, Juan, Anderson, T. Michael, Bakker, Jonathan D., Biederman, Lori A., Blumenthal, Dana, Brown, Cynthia S., Brudvig, Lars A., Caldeira, Maria, Chu, Chengjin, Crawley, Michael J., Daleo, Pedro, Damschen, Ellen I., D'Antonio, Carla M., Decrappeo, Nicole M., Dickman, Chris R., Du, Guozhen, Fay, Philip A., Frater, Paul, Gruner, Daniel S., Hagenah, Nicole, Hector, Andrew, Helm, Aveliina, Hillebrand, Helmut, Hofmockel, Kirsten S., Humphries, Hope C., Iribarne, Oscar, Jin, Virginia L., Kay, Adam, Kirkman, Kevin P., Klein, Julia A., Knops, Johannes M. H., La Pierre, Kimberly J., Ladwig, Laura M., Lambrinos, John G., Leakey, Andrew D. B., Li, Qi, Li, Wei, Mcculley, Rebecca, Melbourne, Brett, Mitchell, Charles E., Moore, Joslin L., Morgan, John, Mortensen, Brent, O'Halloran, Lydia R., Paertel, Meelis, Pascual, Jesus, Pyke, David A., Risch, Anita C., Salguero-Gomez, Roberto, Sankaran, Mahesh, Schuetz, Martin, Simonsen, Anna, Smith, Melinda, Stevens, Carly, Sullivan, Lauren, Wardle, Glenda M., Wolkovich, Elizabeth M., Wragg, Peter D., Wright, Justin, and Yang, Louie
- Abstract:
- Invasions have increased the size of regional species pools, but are typically assumed to reduce native diversity. However, global-scale tests of this assumption have been elusive because of the focus on exotic species richness, rather than relative abundance. This is problematic because low invader richness can indicate invasion resistance by...
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- Article
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- Creator:
- Pfeifer, Marion, Lefebvre, Veronique, Gardner, Toby A., Arroyo‐Rodriguez, Victor, Baeten, Lander, Banks‐Leite, Cristina, Barlow, Jos, Betts, Matthew G., Brunet, Joerg, Cerezo, Alexis, Cisneros, Laura M., Collard, Stuart, D'Cruze, Neil, da Silva Motta, Catarina, Duguay, Stephanie, Eggermont, Hilde, Eigenbrod, Felix, Hadley, Adam S., Hanson, Thor R., Hawes, Joseph E., Heartsill Scalley, Tamara, Klingbeil, Brian T., Kolb, Annette, Kormann, Urs, Kumar, Sunil, Lachat, Thibault, Lakeman Fraser, Poppy, Lantschner, Victoria, Laurance, William F., Leal, Inara R., Lens, Luc, Marsh, Charles J., Medina‐Rangel, Guido F., Melles, Stephanie, Mezger, Dirk, Oldekop, Johan A., Overal, William L., Owen, Charlotte, Peres, Carlos A., Phalan, Ben, Pidgeon, Anna M., Pilia, Oriana, Possingham, Hugh P., Possingham, Max L., Raheem, Dinarzarde C., Ribeiro, Danilo B., Ribeiro Neto, Jose D., Robinson, W. Douglas, Robinson, Richard, Rytwinski, Trina, Scherber, Christoph, Slade, Eleanor M., Somarriba, Eduardo, Stouffer, Philip C., Struebig, Matthew J., Tylianakis, Jason M., Tscharntke, Teja, Tyre, Andrew J., Urbina Cardona, Jose N., Vasconcelos, Heraldo L., Wearn, Oliver, Wells, Konstans, Willig, Michael R., Wood, Eric, Young, Richard P., Bradley, Andrew V., and Ewers, Robert M.
- Abstract:
- Habitat fragmentation studies have produced complex results that are challenging to synthesize. Inconsistencies among studies may result from variation in the choice of landscape metrics and response variables, which is often compounded by a lack of key statistical or methodological information. Collating primary datasets on biodiversity responses to fragmentation in...
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- Article
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- G. Betts6, Joerg Brunet7, Alexis Cerezo8, Laura M. Cisneros9,10, Stuart Collard11, Neil D’Cruze12
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- Creator:
- Narayanan, Kannan Badri, Ali, Manaf, Barclay, Barry J., Bisson, William H., Cheng, Qiang, D'Abronzo, Leandro, Dornetshuber-Fleiss, Rita, Gosh, Paramita M., Gonalez-Guzman, Michael J., Lee, Tae-Jin, Leung, Po Sing, Li, Lin, Luanpitpong, Suidjit, Ratoviski, Edward, Rojanasakul, Yon, Romano, Maria Fiammetta, Romano, Simona, Sinha, Kumar Ranjeet, Yedjou, Clement, Al-Mulla, Fahd, Al-Temaimi, Rabeah, Amedei, Amedeo, Brown, Dustin G., Ryan, Elizabeth P., Colacci, Annamaria, Hamid, Roslida A., Mondello, Chiara, Raju, Jayadev, Salem, Hosni K., Woodrick, Jordan, Scovassi, Ivana, Singh, Neetu, Vaccari, Monica, Roy, Rabindra, Forte, Stefano, Memeo, Lorenzo, Kim, Seo Yun, Lowe, Leroy, and Park, Hyun Ho
- Abstract:
- Cell death is a process of dying within biological cells that are ceasing to function. This process is essential in regulating organism development, tissue homeostasis, and to eliminate cells in the body that are irreparably damaged. In general, dysfunction in normal cellular death is tightly linked to cancer progression. Specifically,...
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- chemicals and cellular mechanisms that confer resistance to cell death Narayanan, K. B., Ali, M., Barclay
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- Creator:
- Nahta, Rita, Al-Mulla, Fahd, Al-Temaimi, Rabeah, Amedei, Amedeo, Andrade-Vieira, Rafaela, Bay, Sarah N., Brown, Dustin G., Calaf, Gloria M., Castellino, Robert C., Cohen-Solal, Karine A., Colacci, Annamaria, Cruickshanks, Nichola, Dent, Paul, Di Fiore, Riccardo, Forte, Stefano, Goldberg, Gary S., Hamid, Roslida A., Krishnan, Harini, Laird, Dale W., Lasfar, Ahmed, Marignani, Paola A., Memeo, Lorenzo, Mondello, Chiara, Naus, Christian C., Ponce-Cusi, Richard, Raju, Jayadev, Roy, Debasish, Roy, Rabindra, Ryan, Elizabeth P., Salem, Hosni K., Scovassi, A. Ivana, Singh, Neetu, Vaccari, Monica, Vento, Renza, Vondráček, Jan, Wade, Mark, Woodrick, Jordan, and Bisson, William H.
- Abstract:
- As part of the Halifax Project, this review brings attention to the potential effects of environmental chemicals on important molecular and cellular regulators of the cancer hallmark of evading growth suppression. Specifically, we review the mechanisms by which cancer cells escape the growth-inhibitory signals of p53, retinoblastoma protein, transforming growth...
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- -Mulla1, Rabeah Al-Temaimi1, Amedeo Amedei2, Rafaela Andrade- Vieira3, Sarah Bay4, Dustin G. Brown5
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- Creator:
- Floudas, Dimitrios, Binder, Manfred, Riley, Robert, Barry, Kerrie, Blanchette, Robert A., Henrissat, Bernard, Martínez, Angel T., Otillar, Robert, Spatafora, Joseph W., Yadav, Jagjit S., Aerts, Andrea, Benoit, Isabelle, Boyd, Alex, Carlson, Alexis, Copeland, Alex, Coutinho, Pedro M., de Vries, Ronald P., Ferreira, Patricia, Findley, Keisha, Foster, Brian, Gaskell, Jill, Glotzer, Dylan, Gorecki, Pawel, Heitman, Joseph, Hesse, Cedar, Hori, Chiaki, Igarashi, Kiyohiko, Jurgens, Joel A., Kallen, Nathan, Kersten, Phil, Kohler, Annegret, Kues, Ursula, Kumar, T. K. Arun, Kuo, Alan, LaButti, Kurt, Larrondo, Luis F., Lindquist, Erika, Ling, Albee, Lombard, Vincent, Lucas, Susan, Lundell, Taina, Martin, Rachael, McLaughlin, David J., Morgenstern, Ingo, Morin, Emanuelle, Murat, Claude, Nagy, Laszlo G., Nolan, Matt, Ohm, Robin A., Patyshakuliyeva, Aleksandrina, Rokas, Antonis, Ruiz-Duenas, Francisco J., Sabat, Grzegorz, Salamov, Asaf, Samejima, Masahiro, Schmutz, Jeremy, Slot, Jason C., St. John, Franz, Stenlid, Jan, Sun, Hui, Sun, Sheng, Syed, Khajamohiddin, Tsang, Adrian, Wiebenga, Ad, Young, Darcy, Pisabarro, Antonio, Eastwood, Daniel C., Martin, Francis, Cullen, Dan, Grigoriev, Igor V., and Hibbett, David S.
- Abstract:
- Wood is a major pool of organic carbon that is highly resistant to decay, owing largely to the presence of lignin. The only organisms capable of substantial lignin decay are white rot fungi in the Agaricomycetes, which also contains non–lignin-degrading brown rot and ectomycorrhizal species. Comparative analyses of 31 fungal...
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- Copeland, Pedro M. Coutinho, Ronald P. de Vries, Patricia Ferreira, Keisha Findley, Brian Foster, Jill